Revised 2020 A guide for superintendent ministers€¦ · doubt already is – your constant...
Transcript of Revised 2020 A guide for superintendent ministers€¦ · doubt already is – your constant...
A guide for superintendent ministersRevised 2020
Sisters and brothers in Christ,
I am delighted to introduce this handbook for superintendents and
grateful to you for answering the call to serve in this vital role in the
life of the Methodist Church.
Much of this handbook focuses on the tasks and practical
responsibilities of a superintendent. However, it does so without
allowing us to forget that superintendency is one expression of the
calling of the presbyter; it is the way in which some of us live out
our vocation to declare the Good News, to celebrate the sacraments,
to serve the needy, to minister to the sick, to welcome the stranger,
and to seek the lost. In the joys and complexities of superintendency,
I hope that you will never lose sight of your calling to be a presbyter,
which first and foremost is to be a person of prayer. May your ministry
as a superintendent enrich and be enriched by your conversation with
the source of all ministry and of all life.
This handbook draws upon the reflections of a number of presbyters
who have served as superintendents and who have known that
enrichment. We are grateful to them for sharing their experiences.
The guidance you will find here is intended as an additional resource,
not as a replacement for the Constitutional Practice and Discipline of
the Methodist Church (CPD), which will become even more what it no
doubt already is – your constant companion and friend.
Whether this is your first taste of superintendency or a ministry to
which you are returning in a different setting, I hope and pray that
you may know the guidance of the Spirit in all that you do and find
joy in your share of Our Calling.
The Revd Dr Jonathan R Hustler
Secretary of the Methodist Conference
3
A guide for the superintendent minister ..................................... 4
Being prepared ................................................................................................... 5
The handover ....................................................................................................... 7
Legal matters ......................................................................................................... 8
Handover meeting checklist ...................................................................... 10
At the beginning of your time as superintendent ............... 14
Your first few weeks ....................................................................................... 14
Organise your diary ........................................................................................ 15
Annual tasks ......................................................................................................... 17
Mission and the Superintendent ......................................................... 19
Stewardship: reducing the risk of fraud ....................................... 21
Meetings .................................................................................................................. 25
Supervision and oversight ........................................................................ 39
Probationers .......................................................................................................... 41
Enabling the ministry of other people ........................................... 43
The circuit plan ................................................................................................... 44
Methodist schools ............................................................................................ 46
The year at a glance: a handy checklist ......................................... 48
Annual calendar ................................................................................................. 49
Appendices ............................................................................................................. 53
Agenda reminders ........................................................................................... 53
Criteria and competencies for Superintendents .......................... 55
Example of a Church Council Agenda shaped around Our Calling .................................................................................... 59
A Methodist Way of Life .............................................................................. 60
A Methodist Way of Life Accountability questions .................... 61
Contacting the Connexional Team ........................................................ 62
Things I wish someone had told me .................................................... 64
Top tips for resilience ..................................................................................... 65
Contents
4
At your welcome service, the Chair of the District will declare:
… to you is committed the responsibility
for the life and work of this Circuit.
And then will ask:
Will you, with your colleagues, lay and ordained,
care for its people,
inspire its witness
and watch over its life
in the name of Christ?
And you will respond:
I will, and I ask God to help me.
The Methodist Worship Book
Watching over and inspiring the people of God in the life of a circuit in the name
of Christ is a significant responsibility – one which the Conference has declared,
through stationing you, that you are called to.
Your calling requires from you a commitment to both being and doing (as do all
ministry callings). This guide offers some tips on ‘being’ a superintendent and ‘doing’
the tasks involved in the role. Good and thorough preparation will enable you to
lead and collaborate well with others. Do not forget the nurturing of your own
spiritual health and well-being. There is no doubt you will need feeding in order to
resource others.
If you are taking up the role of superintendent minister in a circuit where you are
already stationed, you will need to take care not to bolt the superintendent’s duties
onto the duties you had previously. Superintendency has a different focus to other
patterns of ministry and you will need to make time to do it well. This may mean a
change to your pastoral charge, which will need to be discussed with others. Ask for
your letter of understanding to be reviewed and redrafted.
The 2005 Conference report What is a Circuit Superintendent? is a good place to
start your reflection on what it means to be a superintendent. To download it, go to:
www.methodist.org.uk/2005reports
A commitment
A guide for the superintendent minister
5
Once you know you are going to be stationed as a superintendent minister, make
sure that you are enrolled for the superintendents’ induction programme.
Details about the induction can be found on the Methodist Church website
at: www.methodist.org.uk/superintendentsconferences or from the Ministry
Development Coordinator (details at the back of this guide).
The induction looks at what is required of you as a superintendent; how to make
a good start and how you might best enable the ministry of others. All new
superintendents are expected to attend the induction programme.
By the time you become a superintendent, you will have had several experiences of
others inhabiting the role. Some will have been inspirational, others less so. To give
you a good foundation it will be helpful for you to read the following Conference
reports. All are available on the Methodist Church website when you search by
date from www.methodist.org.uk/conferencereports
• Called to Love and Praise (1999 Conference report)
• What is a Circuit Superintendent? (2005 Conference report)
• The Missional Nature of the Circuit (2008 Conference report from the Faith
and Order Committee, Section A)
• Ministry in the Methodist Church (2018 Conference report).
It is difficult to over-estimate the importance of the superintendent having a clear
understanding of certain parts of CPD. Many people think they know what is
included. You will need to know what the current Standing Orders are relating to
circuit life. Spending some time re-reading specific parts of Volume 2, Book III will
be particularly beneficial at this stage:
• Part 5 – The Circuits
• Part 6 – The Local Churches
• Part 9 – Property.
Part 11 – Complaints and Discipline – is also worth noting.
You may also want to download the procedures to Complaints and Discipline from
the Methodist Church website, just in case you need to refer to it when you have
no internet access. You may never need it – but if you do, you need to know where
it is and what is in it. See: www.methodist.org.uk/complaintsanddiscipline
The superintendents’
induction
Preparatory reading
Being prepared
6
Remind yourself of the Creating Safer Space Advanced Module – in particular the
section on safer recruiting for volunteers, local preachers and worship leaders, as
well as for paid employees. Up-to-date information on safeguarding can be found at:
www.methodist.org.uk/safeguardingpolicy
In 2017, the Conference approved the Interim Supervision Policy, which requires
all ministers in active work to be in pastoral supervision. Training in reflective
supervision is currently being rolled out across the Connexion. Those approved to
supervise under the interim policy will be allocated supervisees according to their
district’s supervision implementation plan.
If you believe you will be acting as a supervisor, please contact the Chair of the
district where you will be serving. They will update their district’s supervision
implementation plan, and this will trigger an invitation to attend training (if you are
not already trained).
Those who trained in supervision prior to 2017 will be expected to attend training
linked to the new interim policy
More information on supervision and updates to policy and practice can be found at:
www.methodist.org.uk/supervision
As chair of all meetings in the circuit, you carry responsibility for everything outlined
in Standing Order (SO) 520 – even if you choose to delegate a task.
Familiarise yourself with the rules of debate (see SO 517 and SO 413(5) to (7) and
(10) to (25)). Circuit Meetings are necessarily more formal than Church Councils. As
the chair, you don’t want the other attendees of a meeting to be better acquainted
with the rules of debate than you are. Likewise it is not helpful to make up your own
rules!
Supervision training
Chairing of meetings and
rules of debate
7
The handover
Ideally, to make your transition as smooth as possible, arrange to meet with your
predecessor to discuss the important matters of the life and mission of the circuit
you are about to lead. This handover meeting should cover matters of legality such
as safeguarding, complaints, property issues, finance and employment.
Here we lay out some detail and at the end of the section we offer a checklist to use
at your handover meeting.
• All up to date information on safeguarding is available on the Methodist Church
website at: www.methodist.org.uk/safeguarding
• Get to know who the circuit safeguarding officer is, bearing in mind that
the default person is you, as well as the district safeguarding officer. You will
need to work closely with the circuit and district safeguarding officers in the
management of safeguarding concerns and their support and advice can be of
great assistance.
• Identify whether there are any Safeguarding Contracts in operation. All staff should
be aware of the provisions of SO 692 should a person who is deemed to present a
safeguarding risk decide to worship in a church other than where their contract is.
• Make sure you know what arrangements are in place to enable those with a
Safeguarding Contract to attend circuit services (you may need to refer to the
Creating Safer Space Advanced Module or consult your district safeguarding
officer for further guidance).
• Ask for an up-to-date list of those who have undergone the Foundation, Foundation
Refresher and Advanced training for safeguarding (Creating Safer Space).
• Find out if there are any specific needs in order to encourage people to attend
training. Training can be arranged via your district safeguarding officer.
• Check if the local preachers’ safeguarding declarations and DBS clearances are up
to date and confirm the location of any relevant records. It is worth asking about
local preachers who have transferred between circuits.
Find out who the complaints officer is for your circuit. The default position is that if
no one has been appointed, then it is the superintendent. Before you take over the
superintendency, you will need to know if there are any ongoing cases.
Safeguarding
Complaints and discipline
officer
8
Property
Ask if any of the buildings in the circuit are listed, or in conservation areas. If so, you
will need to read Section 98 of CPD. If the current superintendent can’t give you this
information, then arrange to have a meeting with your circuit (or district) property
secretary as soon as possible once you are in your new station.
Check that all external organisations using church premises have their own
insurance. If an organisation uses the premises for three or fewer times per year,
then it may be covered by the local church’s own policy. However, if they do not
have insurance and require it, Methodist Insurance can offer policies.
Ask if any of the circuit churches are in the midst of, or planning, any building
projects. You should insist on seeing the certificate of professional liability insurance
of any professionals (including architects) with whom a contract is being made.
Buildings registered for marriages
Ask for a list of Authorised Persons for each of the registered buildings in your
circuit. This will help with arranging cover in an emergency. It is helpful for all
ministers to be capable of solemnising marriages in all churches in the circuit; this
is especially important if the requirements of SO O11A(4) – the ‘conscience clause’ –
are to be upheld.
If your circuit covers more than one registration district, it would be wise for
ministers to become Additional Authorised Persons in a chapel not in their
registration district.
Finance
Ask for a list of the auditors or independent examiners used by each of the Church
Councils in the circuit (this comes under the provisions of SO 012(4)-(5)). You must
ask for a description of their independence.
It may be helpful to have a similar conversation with the superintendent of
a neighbouring circuit to ensure that any auditors of circuit funds are truly
independent.
Ask whether any trust bodies (large churches, projects, etc) are registered with the
Charity Commission. If your circuit is a registered charity, you will have to produce an
annual report. You do not have to write the report yourself, but whoever writes it
should try to make it interesting! Be creative in showing how your circuit’s activities
are for the public benefit. The report should be given to the treasurer for each
church.
Legal matters
9
If any of the churches in your circuit run cafés etc, check that they are fulfilling VAT
requirements. If you are not sure if a church should be VAT registered, you can check
at: www.gov.uk/vat-registration/when-to-register
Ask if any office holders within the circuit or local churches are subject to an
insolvency process (which includes becoming compounded with creditors generally)
that makes them incapable of exercising office. This is covered by SO 013(2)-(3A).
Ask if all lay employees are being paid the National Living Wage (note that this is
not the same as the National Minimum Wage). For updates on the current Living
Wage, visit Church Action on Poverty: www.church-poverty.org.uk
Ask what pension arrangements have been made for lay employees. For the latest
advice on pensions, see the lay employment section on the Methodist Church
website. You can find this at: www.methodist.org.uk/layemployment
See also the Pensions Trust website: www.tpt.org.uk
Copyright law
Ask for a list of churches in the circuit that have licences from Christian Copyright
Licensing International and/or Calamus. There are several types of licence; many
churches now need a Performing Rights Licence (PRK or PCL) to allow them to
show film clips, DVDs or put on live music performances. If a church has a theatre
company, it will need a Local Authority Performance Licence. See the table at:
churches.uk.ccli.com/licences/quickguide
If churches are using word copies of hymn books such as Singing the Faith, a licence
is not required unless you print or project the words. More details can be found at:
www.methodist.org.uk/copyright
10
Handover meeting checklist
Main topics
Safeguarding Notes Follow-up
Who is the circuit safeguarding officer?
Is anyone operating a Safeguarding Contract?
What arrangements are in place to enable sex offenders to attend circuit services?
Ask for a list of those who have undergone modular safeguarding training (Creating Safer Space)
Are there any specific needs in order to encourage people to attend training?
Are all local preachers’ Safeguarding Declarations and DBS clearances up to date and in the circuit safe?
11
Main topics
Complaints and discipline Notes Follow-up
Who is the local complaints officer?
Property Notes Follow-up
Which buildings are listed?
Which are in conservation areas?
Do all external organisations using church premises have their own insurance?
Are any of the circuit churches in the midst of, or planning, any building projects?
Have you asked to see the professional liability insurance of builders, architects etc?
Are all actions from Quinquennials up to date? Who is overseeing this?
12
Main topics
Marriages Notes Follow-up
Have you been given a list of authorised persons for each of the registered buildings?
Does your circuit cover more than one registration district?
If yes:
Are ministers registered as Additional Authorised Persons across the circuit?
Finance Notes Follow-up
Have you been given a list of the auditors or independent examiners used by each of the Church Councils in the circuit (including a description of their independence)?
Are any trust bodies registered with the Charity Commission?
Is the circuit registered with the Charity Commission?
13
Main topics
Finance Notes Follow-up
Are any of the churches running cafés, etc?
Are they are fulfilling VAT requirements?
Are any office holders within the circuit or local churches subject to an insolvency process?
Are all lay employees being paid the Living Wage?
What arrangements for pension provision have been made for lay employees?
Copyright Notes Follow-up
Which churches in the circuit have licences from Christian Copyright Licensing International and/or Calamus?
14
At the beginning of your time as superintendent
There are a number of things that are essential (and one or two that are advisable)
in your first few weeks in post:
1. Appoint all the people whom you plan to authorise to deputise for you in the
chair at Circuit Meetings or Church Councils, including the Church Councils
(whether constituted under SO 610 or SO 611) of those local churches in single
congregation local ecumenical partnerships (see SO 502(1)(b)).
2. Both you and the circuit property/finance secretary should see the Standard
Form of Accounts (formerly known as Schedule B) for each local church. Make a
note of the pertinent figures for each local church in your circuit and get an idea
for yourself about their finances. You should also check that the requirements of
SO 914 are being upheld (ie investments are sent to be held by the Trustees for
Methodist Church Purposes [TMCP]).
3. Organise your diary (see below).
4. Ask your colleagues in local ecumenical partnerships (LEPs) to let you have a
copy of the LEP constitution. Most single congregation LEPs use buildings on
which there is a Sharing Agreement; a copy should be in the circuit safe and
it is advisable to be familiar with its provisions. Ask your district ecumenical
officer (DEO) or Synod Secretary to indicate whether a direction has been given
by the Synod under SO 611 for any single congregation LEPs; this also affects
the pastoral care of members under SO 644(11)(iii). This conversation with your
DEO is a good opportunity to ask informally if there is anything you need to be
aware of concerning LEPs in your circuit, or for advice they might give you.
5. Book a pastoral visit to meet colleagues (lay and ordained) and other significant
officers in the circuit (treasurers, secretaries of various meetings, safeguarding
officers) within the first quarter.
Your first few weeks
15
In the introduction to this guide, we highlighted the need for good preparation in
successful superintendency. Already you will have begun to realise that one of the
ways to achieve this is to exercise good diary management. Here are some tips to
help you with this.
• Add to your diary any dates your predecessor may have left you.
• Find out what the dates of school holidays are for every local authority in the
area your circuit covers, so that you can avoid scheduling meetings during those
times. You can usually find these dates on the local authorities’ websites.
• Do not forget to allot time for your own holidays, study days (SO 745 (4) (a))
and rest days. Put them in early, even if you end up negotiating a change with a
colleague at a later stage.
• Check the Synod diary and ensure you have all the district dates in your diary
that are personally relevant for you or need advertising around your circuit (you
should especially note Superintendents’ Meetings, Candidates’ Committee and
Probationers’ Committee).
• Plan well ahead. Planning 18 months ahead for major meetings is useful, but a
minimum of 12 months will ensure everyone knows what is being planned. For
effective management, you will need to keep this 18-month diary rolling.
• It is always good to speak to the person who has responsibility for supporting
vocational exploration in your district to find out any arrangements and dates.
• Add to your diary the dates and times when you will be in supervision. If you are
a supervisor in your district, also add the dates when you are acting as supervisor.
• If you are in a single-minister station, you will need to book your district chair
well in advance for their annual visit, in keeping with SO 425(1).
Preparation time
Once you have blocked out the main meeting dates in your diary, add some
preparation time for each new meeting. Remember, preparing for ‘firsts’ always
takes more time and energy.
Block a catch-up day each month, free from other duties, so that you do not get
behind with administration. You could also use it for planning and reflection. If you
have a circuit administrator, you will need time to organise the delegation of work.
Organise your diary
16
Colleagues’ holidays
Ask your staff for their proposed holiday dates, quarter days, retreat/training dates
and sabbatical dates so that you can arrange adequate ministerial cover. You are
responsible for making sure that there is cover for pastoral emergencies in the
circuit. Once you have all the dates, pay particular attention to school holidays
(especially Christmas and summer) to ensure the circuit has adequate cover.
Pastoral care of ministerial colleagues
It is good practice to visit each colleague (and possibly their households) at least
once a year. Some superintendents prefer to invite colleagues and their families for
a meal at their manse.
Visit each supernumerary and minister’s widow or widower residing in the circuit
at least once a year. Many superintendents find the delivery of the Minutes of
Conference gives an ideal opportunity to do this. For more information on using the
gifts of supernumeraries, see: www.methodist.org.uk/supernumerary-ministers
There are a number of ministers in appointments other than circuit appointments
named in SO 780. Arrange to visit the ones in your circuit – or to have a coffee
with them at least once a year. Use this time to discuss with them how they wish to
participate in the life of the circuit. Consider also your contribution to the pastoral
care of those in their households.
If a colleague dies
If a minister or probationer dies in your circuit, please notify the district chair and
the Conference Office as soon as possible. Eventually you will need to ensure that an
obituary is prepared (SO 487). Similarly, inform the district chair if a local preacher,
circuit steward or other significant member of the circuit (or their partner) dies.
17
Annual tasks
There are certain tasks a superintendent needs to attend to on an annual basis.
Some are just good housekeeping; others allow us to work properly as the
Connexion.
You need to know of any decisions of the Conference that may impinge upon your
circuit – especially any reports that are commended for local discussion and/or
response. See to it that any deferred special resolutions of the Conference (SO 126
(3), (5)) are placed on the agendas of your Circuit Meeting and all Church Councils.
The Conference Agenda is available on the Methodist Church website. The Minutes
of the Conference will give you the information you need. Listen out for the
Conference report from Synod. The Media Team also produce a Conference Digest,
which is helpful.
Be sure you are aware of any amendments in CPD (the passages in bold italic type)
and highlight these amendments to your colleagues. New sections, which do not
always appear in bold italic type, are highlighted in the introductory pages to
Volume 2.
Under SO 305, district chairs and superintendent ministers are jointly mentioned
as being responsible for statistical and property returns from churches and circuit
initiatives. In practical terms, this means knowing who is responsible for completing
the online annual returns and how to keep track of progress for filling them in.
Superintendent ministers should also report, via the Statistics for Mission church
closure procedure, any society closure or merger within their circuit once district
approval has been obtained.
Check and keep an inventory of the documents kept in the circuit safe. This should
be done at least once a year (SO 903). These will probably include building deeds,
certificates of Registration for Public Worship or Marriage, and other such legal
documents. It is good practice to have a witness present when opening the safe.
Complete the annual form relating to anticipated stationing needs, and return it
to the district chair (timetables vary between districts; you will be asked for the
information at the required time).
Make sure you are aware of the process for handling the re-invitation of ministers.
Refer to the Code of Practice for the invitation and stationing process, which is
issued annually and on the Methodist Church website at:
www.methodist.org.uk/stationing
Decisions of the Conference
Statistics for Mission and
property returns
The circuit safe
Stationing needs
18
Occasionally a Circuit Invitation Committee or a ministerial colleague may indicate
their wish for an appointment to be curtailed. Curtailments are always sensitive and
require you to offer pastoral care to the minister (and their family). Details around
the curtailment procedures are laid out in SO 544. You will need to inform the
Conference Office of any curtailment.
If the circuit considers it requires an authorisation for the administration of the
Lord’s Supper by someone other than a presbyter, under the provisions of SO 011,
make sure you obtain the required form from your Synod secretary and return it
in time for consideration at the relevant District Policy Committee (DPC), which
you have the right to attend. You will need to remember that authorisations are
renewable annually. In all cases, have a conversation with your district chair about
their policy for delegation of instruction under SO 011(6). It is likely to be you to
whom this responsibility will be delegated. If you have a presbyteral probationer,
you will need to apply for an authorisation if the circuit needs them to be able to
preside at Holy Communion.
If you are applying to the District Policy Committee for grants for employing people,
then the form on the Methodist Church website must be returned to the district
secretary concerned (SO 439). You and another representative from the circuit may
attend the grants committee. Make sure that you know the particular deadlines for
applications.
Ensure the Synod secretary is told the names and contact details of your circuit’s
representatives to Synod for the next connexional year as soon
as they are elected.
Check that the permissions for any non-Methodist public religious meetings
are current and, when necessary, formally renewed for a further period not
exceeding twelve months by the appropriate managing trustees. This requires the
consent of the Methodist Council (using a Schedule 14a: www.methodist.org.uk/
annualschedules), as well as the Superintendent and a TMCP approved licence or
booking form. (See Model Trust 14(2A) and SOs 920 and 931(3).)
Helpful details can be found here: bit.do/letting
Be aware of SO 920, which requires you to have an understanding of the teachings
of any group worshipping on Methodist premises.
Curtailment of an appointment
Authorisation for the
administration of the Lord’s
Supper
Grants
Representatives to Synod
Building used for non-
Methodist public worship
19
SO 500 states: “The Circuit is the primary unit in which Local Churches express and
experience their interconnexion in the Body of Christ, for purpose of mission, mutual
encouragement and help.”
What is a Circuit Superintendent reminds us that the Superintendent acts as the
chief officer in the Circuit Leadership Team. Therefore, you will be responsible (with
others) in leading the circuit in mission.
The mission of a circuit or church is often shaped by a mission development plan.
Help on shaping a mission plan can be found at: www.methodist.org.uk/mission-
planning
If your circuit has a mission plan, it is helpful to review where God is in the work.
A helpful tool can be found at: www.methodist.org.uk/media/11581/mission-plan-
review.docx
After our people, our properties are one of the biggest assets to enabling mission.
The Connexional Team can help you if you are considering how you might use a
property for mission. A set of starter questions have been devised to enable churches
and circuits to frame their thinking:
• How does this church property shape and give expression to the circuit/district
mission plan(s)?
• Is there no longer potential for Methodist mission from this property?
• What alternative uses might be made of the property/site as an expression of
Methodist mission and ministry?
• Is the site of strategic importance within the locality?
• What other Christian presence remains in the locality, particularly in rural areas?
Is this the only community space in the locality?
• What are the alternative uses with the site vacated? Take into account the
local authority strategic plan, among other things. Could it be redeveloped to
generate income for mission elsewhere?
• What ecumenical/other partnership opportunities exist for using the property?
• Are alternative sites available which better enable mission?
If you are reviewing properties in your circuit, refer to the Property Strategy at:
www.methodist.org.uk/property/strategy
If you find your circuit is already involved in a property project or is thinking of
embarking on one, a helpful site is: www.methodist.org.uk/property/project
Using property for mission
Mission and the Superintendent
20
Do not forget – you are not alone. The Connexional Team is there to help you.
Details of contacts are available at the back of the handbook or on the website.
For everything you have ever wanted to know (and more) about property and the
Methodist Church, please look at: www.methodist.org.uk/property
Keep referring back to this website, as new and updated information is added over
the year to help and support your work and the work of the churches in your circuit.
It is useful to be aware of these pages, so that you can recommend them to the
appropriate people in your circuit and churches – this might include your colleagues!
21
Local Methodist churches, circuits and districts are sadly not immune from fraud.
Fraud is dishonesty, involving:
• False representation, for example identity fraud.
• Failure to disclose information.
• Abuse of position to make a gain or cause loss to another.
Each church treasurer is responsible for keeping the books, presenting the accounts,
and providing their Church Council with sufficient information to enable them to
make informed decisions. The church treasurer has a duty to ensure that the systems
and procedures that support the financial administration keep the possibility
of fraud to a minimum. It is the responsibility of the whole Church Council to
understand the finances, to question the treasurer and to have sufficient oversight
of the finances to ensure the treasurer is not left alone just ‘to get on with it’.
The key point to remember is that, whilst a church treasurer looks after a local
church’s finances throughout the year, they do not have sole responsibility for
the finances of the local church. That responsibility rests firmly with the Church
Council as the local managing trustee of the church’s property. This property is not
just about the building; it includes all property, funds, investments and contents
held on the Model Trust. The Church Council will also oversee general funds and
benevolence funds, as well as money that may have been received from a legacy for
a particular purpose. Fraud not only results in financial loss and police action, but
reputational damage to the Methodist Church, a loss of morale in the local church
and circuit, potential regulatory action by the Charity Commission and an impact on
future funding such as lottery grants.
Trustees have a legal duty to take adequate steps to protect and detect bribery,
fraud, financial abuse and other irregularities. It is important to implement and
monitor sound financial controls and procedures.
Minimise the potential for fraud by taking the following steps.
Managing the bank accounts
• In accordance with SO 012(1), ensure that Methodist money is held in properly
established and official bank accounts; not in personal accounts.
• All payments must be agreed by at least two trustees.
Responsibility for local church
finances
Steps to minimise fraud
Stewardship: reducing the risk of fraud
22
• A minimum panel of four signatories should normally be available to sign
cheques or other payment instructions. Blank cheques must never be signed
nor should the payees ever sign the same cheque for which they are receiving
payment.
• Each cheque or payment instruction requires two signatures in accordance with
SO 012(1).
• No cheque should be signed or countersigned without the signatories having
adequate supporting evidence of the authenticity of the payment.
• Retain all spoilt cheques and make them available to the auditor/independent
examiner (IE).
• Online banking payments should only be made using software which provides
the facility for dual authorisation by personnel approved by the Church Council.
In some circumstances a supplementary list of payments made should be
subsequently countersigned by a trustee.
• Investments in deposits or other financial products must be approved by the
Church Council.
• Similarly any transfers of investments should also be authorised by the Church
Council.
Keeping records
• The Church Council must ensure there is supporting documentation for all
transactions. These should include, inter alia, offerings journal, offerings record
for treasurer, cash receipts record, invoices and receipts, bank statement,
expenses claim form and cash analysis book.
• Planned-giving receipts should be recorded on a control sheet, which can then
be reconciled with a register of donors committed to supporting the church
financially on a regular basis.
Bank statements
• Arrange for your bank to send a copy of the bank statement to you and a senior
steward each month.
• Bank statements should be checked by someone in addition to the church
treasurer (the person checking should not have a personal or close relationship
to the church treasurer).
• If you are able to view your account online, consider having read-only access to
the bank account.
Bank mandate
• The Church Council or Circuit Meeting should annually confirm the names on the
bank mandate and ensure that there is occasional change.
23
Cash
• All financial transactions must be recorded gross, which includes all money
received and paid out.
• Loose cash from collections should always be counted by two people.
• A Collection Record Sheet should be completed and signed by those counting cash.
• Cash should be banked promptly and intact without any deductions for expense
payments.
• Expense-reimbursement claims should be paid by cheque or bank transfer.
• If small expenses are paid in cash then a separate small expenses account should
be kept and all payments recorded and supporting vouchers/receipts filed. These
payments should then be signed off by a trustee each time the cash float is
topped up.
Year-end procedure
• The superintendent minister (or other nominated minister) or senior steward
should examine the year-end statements from the bank, Central Finance Board
(CFB) and the Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes (TMCP).
• If there has been a long delay in the presentation of the year-end financial
statements, the Council or Circuit Meeting should carry out an investigation
quickly.
• A senior steward or minister should accompany the treasurer at the signoff
meeting with the auditor/IE.
Appointment of auditor or independent examiner (IE)
• For compliance with SO 012 and the requirements of the Charity Commission
in respect of audit or IE, depending on the level of income, see the Charity
Commission’s webpages on www.gov.uk for Independent examination of charity
accounts: Directions and guidance for examiners (CC32).
• Independent examiners should be appointed by the Church Council, not just the
treasurer and should not be related to, or a close friend of, the treasurer.
• The appointment should be by the Church Council or Circuit Meeting and
confirmed by the secretary of the meeting sending a letter of appointment direct
to the auditor/IE each year.
Division of responsibilities
• Wherever possible avoid a concentration of financial responsibility into one
or two people. Ideally, have different people as treasurer, gift aid secretary,
counters of the offertories, controllers of the envelope scheme.
24
Circuit stewards treasurers’ responsibilities
• Circuit stewards should be diligent in collecting church accounts by the due date.
• The circuit stewards may wish to review a local church’s accounts and point out
glaring errors or consider whether the IE is truly independent of the treasurer.
• Annually review the reserves policy and check on those of the churches in the
circuit.
• It is recommended that the circuit stewards should not also be either the district
treasurer or a treasurer of a church in the circuit.
Where there is initial evidence that fraud may have occurred, this must be reported
immediately to the Superintendent Minister. If your local church or circuit has been
the victim of attempted or actual fraud, report this to Action Fraud at:
www.actionfraud.police.uk or phone 0300 123 2040.
Inform the Conference Office at Methodist Church House.
Email: [email protected]
A serious incident report should be made to the Charity Commission, stating the
allegations or concerns that have been raised. The email should be sent to:
For further information go to: www.gov.uk
You will find the Charity Commission at www.gov.uk
For more information on managing your local churches’ resources responsibly,
review section 7 of The Essential Trustee (CC3)
Other helpful resources include:
• Compliance Toolkit Chapter 3: Fraud and Financial Crime
• Internal Financial Controls for Charities (CC8)
• Charities and Risk Management (CC26)
• How to report a serious incident in your charity: www.gov.uk/guidance/how-to-
report-a-serious-incident-in-your-charity
For more information on everything to do with finance, see:
www.methodist.org.uk/finance
What to do if you suspect
fraud has taken place
Charity Commission
resources
Methodist finance
resources
25
Getting someone to coordinate the travel to Synod will cut down on circuit
expenses, and is a more environmentally friendly way of working.
At the Synod, you will need to empty the circuit mail box. Don’t do it too early, or
you may miss materials that have been added later in the day.
In order that information flows between the various parts of our Church you should
ensure that the pattern of Circuit Meetings follows that illustrated below.
The district Synod
Circuit Meetingsr
Meetings
Spring Synod (May)
ChurchCouncils
(February)
Autumn Synod (early September)
CircuitMeeting(before
31 March)
Circuit Meeting
(before 20 September)
ChurchCouncils(October)
AnnualCircuit Meetings
Flow Diagram
26
The September Circuit Meeting
This should be held after the district Synod and before 20 September. This allows
for re-invitations to be considered (SO 545 and 546) and/or stationing needs to be
addressed.
If your own invitation is due to be considered, make sure you book your district
chair well in advance so that s/he may chair the Circuit Meeting (SO 545(4)(a)). The
district chair may nominate a deputy to fulfil this role. There is much to commend
having the re-invitation as the last item of business, and chairing the meeting
yourself up to that point before handing the chair over.
If your treasurer cannot get the accounts audited in time for the September
meeting, then they should present them unaudited (or at the very least
summarised). You will then need to make sure your March meeting receives the
auditor’s report and finalised accounts.
If you are intending to vary the number of representatives from local churches
under SO 510(1) (viii), the September meeting is the best meeting to propose
this, as it will allow local churches to use their February Church Councils to elect
representatives.
The March Circuit Meeting
This should meet after all the February/March Church Councils and in time to
send any memorials (SO 516) or the results of any voting on any deferred special
resolutions of the Conference (SO 126(3),(5) to the Conference Office. The deadline
for both is 31 March.
If the audited accounts have not been presented to the September meeting, they
should be presented to this March meeting.
Church assessment meeting
It is good practice to hold a separate meeting with the circuit stewards and the
individual church treasurers to discuss the assessment. It is important for you to
attend as part of the mission of the circuit, even if you invite someone else to chair
the meeting.
27
Other Circuit Meetings
CPD states there should be a minimum of two Circuit Meetings per year, shown
in the diagram on page 25. This may not be adequate for your circuit and you
may wish to consider additional meetings in December and May/June, which will
allow for a more extended discussion of the life of the circuit and an additional
opportunity for local churches to bring property approval requests.
When and where
It is worth considering rotating the Circuit Meetings through the week. However, it
might be worth avoiding Fridays. Using this pattern, plan the dates at least a year (if
not 18 months) in advance.
Likewise, it is worth considering rotating the meeting around the churches in the
circuit. This enables churches to offer hospitality and gives non-preaching members
of the Circuit Meeting a chance to visit other churches in the circuit.
Make-up of the Circuit Meeting
You should review on a regular basis the make-up of the meeting, asking if it is
sufficiently representative with regard to age, sex and ethnic origin (SO 513).
Make sure the Circuit Meeting secretary lists all the members on every agenda, as
this will remove all doubt as to who has a vote (SO 514(2)).
It is worth encouraging others who are not members of the meeting to attend
and participate in the greater conversation about the work of God in the circuit. If
you do this, remember that you may need to go into closed session (SO 514(3)) for
confidential items.
Agenda
CPD Book VII Part 6 offers guidance on the agenda. See also sections in the
appendix on the September and March Circuit Meetings to consider what you might
add at specific times of the year.
Ensure that an agenda is drafted and delivered to all members of the Circuit
Meeting at least seven days (but preferably fourteen) before the meeting.
It is advisable to publish the dates of all meetings in the circuit diary. Also give
notice of the next meeting at the end of each meeting’s agenda. If you need to call
any extra (non-emergency) meetings, you are required to give 14 days’ notice (SO
910(d)).
28
Specific items that need to be discussed at various times
Annual manse inspections
You will need to ensure that the Circuit Meeting receives a report of the annual
manses inspection (SO 954(i)). See: www.methodist.org.uk/property/manse
It is worth noting that SO 954(vi) requires the circuit to have a discussion at least
every four years about the longer-term strategy and condition of the manses. Check
past agendas; if this item is not on there, consider it overdue.
Archives
Include archives at least annually, to remind people of the need to preserve minute
books etc, and to comply with your responsibilities under SO 015(2)-(2A). A summer
meeting is good for this purpose, as officers who might be standing down prepare
to hand over old files to new officers.
Property projects
Make sure that the provisions of SO 951 are followed for property projects
presented to the Circuit Meeting. See: www.methodist.org.uk/property/project
Quinquennial inspections
Quinquennial inspections are to be completed for church buildings and manses
every five years. These inspections are designed to identify any immediate defects
and to help prepare for potential issues in the future. It is important to ensure that
the recommendations from the surveyor are carried out in order to prevent any
defects from escalating. For more information, please refer to: www.methodist.org.
uk/property/maintenance
Charities Commission
Try to make the annual report required for registered charities as inspiring,
stimulating and informative as possible!
Invitation Committee
SO 541 requires the Circuit Meeting to appoint an Invitations Committee annually.
It is often helpful if the Circuit Meeting delegates all invitation responsibilities and
duties to the Invitation Committee; if they do so, they will need to report to the
following Circuit Meeting. For details, please consult the standing order.
It is worth noting that if you have an LEP in your circuit, it is best practice (and
indeed may be required) to include ecumenical partners in drawing up the profile
for appointing your own successor as superintendent.
Minimum size of a church
Ensure you are aware of any local churches which are, or may be coming, under the
provisions of SO 612 (minimum size), and need to have Church Council members
appointed by the Circuit Meeting.
29
If you have any former local churches which have become classes of other local
churches under SO 612, then make sure they appear as an item on the Circuit
Meeting agenda at least once per year for you to consider worship provision there
(SO 605(5)).
Worship leaders
If you have agreed to permit a worship leader to serve more than one local church,
you need to inform the Circuit Meeting and the Local Preachers’ Meeting (SO 683(4)).
Creative ideas for the Circuit Meeting agenda
Ask the host church to offer refreshments before or after the meeting.
You might allow a slot for local churches (on a rota basis) to give a presentation
about themselves and their mission to the rest of the circuit.
Try forming the agenda around the four aspects of Our Calling. This helps the
meeting ensure that everything we discuss brings us back to our core principles:
reminding us that all we do is a response the good news of the gospel.
Rules of debate
As highlighted earlier, it is essential that you understand the rules of debate (see SO
517 and SO 413(5) to (7) and (10) to (25)).
If you are a superintendent in Scotland, ensure that the annual Sunday collection for
the Relief and Extension Fund for Methodism in Scotland takes place (SO 476). You
have a seat on the General Committee of that fund, which normally meets at Synod.
If you are in a single-church circuit, make sure that you are aware of and comply
with SO 511, especially clauses (4) and (5).
Superintendents in Scotland
Single-church circuits
30
According to SO 560(3), the Local Preachers’ Meeting should meet quarterly –
ideally before the Circuit Meeting, to allow for accreditation recommendations to
be presented. Aim to have meetings in September, December, February/March and
May/June.
The Local Preachers’
Meeting
Spring Synod (May)
ChurchCouncils
(February)
Autumn Synod (early September)
CircuitMeeting(before
31 March)
Circuit Meeting
(before 20 September)
ChurchCouncils(October)
AnnualCircuit Meetings
Flow Diagram
Local Preachers’ Meeting
Local Preachers’ Meeting
Local Preachers’ Meeting
Local Preachers’ Meeting
31
Agenda
CPD Book VII Part 6 offers guidance on the agenda.
Have a conversation with the local preachers’ secretary and local tutor(s) before
you plan each meeting agenda. You can then determine if you need to allow time
for any training issues, such as interviews. It is for you to determine who conducts
interviews (SO 566(2)).
Note that all local preachers have a responsibility for continuing development.
Consider, therefore, including space for creative conversations at the Local
Preachers’ Meeting. More information and ideas can be found at:
www.methodist.org.uk/CLPD
You could discuss subjects such as:
• what one or two of the local preachers have learnt from their Local Preacher
Review
• good use of amplification systems
• how to use projection and PowerPoint well in worship
• what the next circuit preaching series should be about
• use of the creative arts
• all-age worship
• complying with copyright law when reproducing words and images
• support for local arrangement services (SO 569).
You can invite other people to participate at the Local Preachers’ Meeting (SO
560(6)), such as worship leaders, stewards and musicians. Even if they are not
regularly present, consider inviting them to the annual celebration of the Lord’s
Supper. Musicians, especially, will appreciate being able to receive Holy Communion
without having other duties to perform.
Once a year, read out SO 563(1)-(4), Duties and Rights of Local Preachers, at the Local
Preachers’ Meeting. The 2018 Conference amended these duties, so please always
use to the most recent edition of The Constitutional Practice and Discipline of the
Methodist Church (CPD) to ensure you refer to the current Duties and Rights of Local
Preachers. Guidance notes are offered at www.methodist.org.uk/lp. Ask the Local
Preachers’ Meeting secretary to send an up-to-date copy of Standing Order 563 to
each local preacher who is not present at that meeting.
Each year, Local Preachers are required to attend a service of reaffirmation of
their call (SO 563(3)(v)). A service entitled Remembering your Call is available at:
www.methodist.org.uk/localpreachersecretaries
32
Your responsibilities beyond the Local Preachers’ Meeting
Remember that you have responsibility for the development needs of local
preachers. Here are some suggestions as to how you might approach this.
• Introduce a rolling programme of local preachers’ pastoral interviews, so that
you meet every preacher once a year if possible. Use this interview to talk about
their continuing development. If there are simply too many local preachers for
you to do this, then share this task among the circuit staff. Remember, too,
that the pastoral care of preachers is shared with the Local Preachers’ Meeting
secretary (SO 562(1)(iii)).
• Visit local preachers who come ‘on note’ and those who are ‘on trial’. Keep
an eye out for those who are in danger of running over the five-year limit for
training and offer them support. Remember that extensions are exceptional and
involve you, as superintendent, in a great deal of work (SO 564B(3)).
• Ensure those who are ‘on note’ for the coming quarter receive a note from
you (SO 564A). Remember that they should not receive the first note until they
have satisfied the Methodist Church’s safeguarding requirements and shared an
interview with you (SO 564). The most recent recommendations suggest running
a DBS check before issuing a note to preach.
• If the Preaching Plan allows, tell the preachers that you will occasionally turn up
to hear them preach, so that you might support them in their ministry. Then it
won’t surprise them to see you in the congregation. Ideally leave yourself free
at least once a quarter to listen to other preachers. Otherwise your oversight of
them will always be secondhand.
• Have a conversation with staff and local preachers about the possibility of an
occasional (or annual?) circuit-wide preaching series, especially with regard to SO
524 (Doctrinal Preaching). This will enable smaller churches to share in what is
sometimes only available to the larger churches.
• Have a conversation with the Local Preachers’ Meeting secretary about Local
Preachers’ Sunday. Does the circuit have one? Are there any arrangements with
neighbouring circuits?
• More suggestions are on the Methodist Church website, search under local
preachers, and in the Local Preachers, Worship Leaders E-Newsletter.
See: www.methodist.org.uk/lpwlnews
33
New local preachers
It is the responsibility of the Local Preachers’ Meeting secretary to inform the
Connexional Team of any changes (additions or removals) to your circuit’s plan.
This is done by completing the online form, which can be found on the Methodist
Church website at: www.methodist.org.uk/localpreachersecretaries
Your Local Preachers’ Secretary can also request certificates for recognition services
as well as long-service awards. It is worth familiarising yourself with the information
required by the Connexion.
If you have the joy of organising a service of admission for a new local preacher, then
it is polite to ask the local preacher who they would like to preach at this service. It
should be a special service; they have given several years of their life in training and
preparation, so it would be entirely inappropriate to tack it on to an existing service,
especially as this would preclude many local preacher colleagues from attending.
Circuit leadership teams (CLTs) are formed by and report to the Circuit Meeting (SO
515(2)).
SO 531(3)(ii) requires circuit stewards to meet at least twice a year, however it is
worth considering meeting more regularly with circuit stewards, ministers and
appropriate lay employees.
If your Circuit Stewards are in the practice of meeting without you, you should ask
that they:
• adhere to the same principle as the Staff Meeting (see below) of not formulating
policy recommendations without the rest of the CLT
• send you (as chair of their meeting) notes of any meetings they have had.
Training materials are available for circuit stewards. Speak to your Learning Network
Coordinator, or see: www.methodist.org.uk/circuitstewards
A new handbook for church stewards is available to download and print from:
www.methodist.org.uk/churchstewards-resources
Agenda
Standing Order 531 lists the stewards’ duties. Use these meetings to discuss these
issues but don’t neglect the opportunity to see this meeting as a ‘think-tank’ away
from a formal agenda. Pray together and seek the work of the Holy Spirit. Avoid
a rehearsal of everything that a Circuit Meeting should rightly discuss and decide.
This only leads to a restless CLT at the Circuit Meeting, whilst the rest of the Circuit
Circuit leadership
teams
34
Meeting feel disenfranchised because all they are being asked to do is rubber-stamp
decisions that appear to have already been made.
Staffing
Keep in the forefront of conversations matters relating to future staffing needs.
Consider, for example, the advantages of inviting deacons, using the gifts of
supernumeraries, or appointing lay employees. If your circuit is considering
changing the number of ministers stationed to it, then remember that the District
Policy Committee needs to be consulted and Synod will need to give permission
before that decision can be implemented (SO 438).
If you are discussing the change of pastoral responsibility of ministers, and one of
those ministers is serving in an LEP, then ensure that discussions take place with the
Staffing Advisory Group and the relevant officers of other denominations (eg church
wardens, archdeacons, United Reformed Church moderators, Baptist deacons). No
change should happen without the Staffing Advisory Group’s permission. Don’t
forget to talk to your district ecumenical officer!
Deacons
The Warden or Deputy Warden of the Methodist Diaconal Order (MDO) is always
happy to help circuits consider their staffing needs. Among other things, they can
advise on creating or sustaining a diaconal appointment, advise on vocational
events or help a circuit develop its own rule of life.
The CLT should remember that deacons are members of a religious order living by
a rule of life as well as an order of ministry under the discipline of the Conference.
This brings certain obligations, including a requirement to attend Area Groups and
Convocation and that the travel expenses related to that are the responsibility of
the circuit.
Deacons are to be listed on the plan as staff members and again in the list of local
preachers as appropriate. If deacons are local preachers, they are responsible for
offering dates for the plan themselves.
Deacons can, of course, conduct weddings if they are authorised, as well as funerals
and baptisms with the permission of the superintendent, and offer extended
communion.
It is worth remembering that diaconal appointment profiles are usually specific and
the focus of the deacon’s appointment cannot be changed without the agreement
of the Methodist Diaconal Order.
35
Working with the CLT to provide an appropriate welcome to incoming ministers
You should work alongside the CLT to ensure any manse that is changing over
occupancy is ready in good time to be a place of welcome to the incoming minister.
Guidelines are offered in Book VII of CPD. Remind circuit stewards of the need to
have a current energy performance certificate for incoming ministers (Book VII Part
1 (2)).
Remember, these are minimal standards. It might be useful to ask: “What is the
best welcome we could offer?” and then aim for that!
Ministerial Covenant
For a number of years, the Conference and the connexion have been discussing a
Ministerial Code of Conduct, which has become the Ministerial Covenant and will
be presented to the Conference in 2020. Here the Conference tries to capture the
two sides of the coin: being a minister and the context of ministry. It will be good
to share this material with the Circuit Leadership Team and others in the circuit. It
is thought that this document will become more important in supervision and the
invitation process.
Sabbaticals
It is a good thing to ensure appropriate discussions take place about sabbatical
arrangements at the CLT, not just at the staff meeting. Changes were made to the
frequency of sabbaticals by the 2018 Conference, so make sure you are up to date.
There are more details about sabbatical preparation on the Methodist Church
website at: www.methodist.org.uk/sabbaticals
Developing your circuit’s mission: conversation partners
Your CLT will need to talk about strategies to implement Circuit Meeting decisions.
You may wish to talk to your Learning Network regional coordinator or district
development enabler about ways they can help you do this. It is a good idea to
invite the district chair to come and take part in the conversation on a regular basis.
Voluntary district officers are also useful conversation partners, and could give
advice on their areas of expertise. Such officers might include advisors on disability,
property or children’s and youth work. Use your Synod handbook/directory as a tool
to build your CLT agendas.
36
The busier circuit staff are, the more important it is that they meet together to pray
and take counsel. SO 523 recommends a weekly staff meeting. This is quite feasible
for a smaller circuit and means that you can meet for 90 minutes, including coffee
and prayer time. The best time to implement this is on arrival at a circuit! For larger
circuits, it is arguably more important to meet regularly. The locality will probably
determine how you might do this.
Monthly meetings should be the absolute minimum but they have their downside: if
a member of staff misses one meeting it will be two months before they meet their
colleagues again. It is important that staff make the staff meeting a priority, so you
may need to encourage them to tell funeral directors, etc, they are not available at
that time.
A good working pattern has proven to be:
• Week 1: Prayer and business
• Week 2: Bible study
• Week 3: Prayer and taking counsel.
• Week 4: Accountability – see Methodist Way of Life in the appendix.
This allows for the staff to watch over one another in love, and to:
• take counsel together respecting the affairs of the circuit (SO 523)
• discuss how the circuit may maintain doctrinal preaching (SO 524)
• confer, encourage and be accountable (SO 742).
The staff meeting is a good place to hold each other to account. Make sure that
ministers have the appropriate number of Sundays off each year. You might find it
helpful to set up an online calendar (such as the ones provided by Google) for circuit
staff to use.
It might be helpful for each member of staff to take it in turns to lead the staff
meeting. Likewise, each member may choose to host the meeting or you could hold
it in a central location.
It is best not to use the staff meeting to formulate recommendations to the Circuit
Meeting about policy. Such a practice excludes others (eg the CLT) who should be
part of those discussions.
Be imaginative
Staff meetings are an excellent place to remind staff of good practice. You could:
• discuss the resolutions on pastoral work (Book VI Part 1)
• look at part of the Guidance section of CPD (Book VI Part 2)
• discuss Conference reports
Staff meeting agenda and
frequency
37
• share a discussion on a theological book – or a chapter of a book, or even a TV
programme
• focus on a different local church or project in the circuit
• try using some of the old rules for a class meeting or the Methodist Way of Life
• share learning from sabbaticals
• share Ministerial Development Review (MDR) goals
• hear from probationers about their studies.
Business that needs to be covered when you first arrive
• Check whether there are any building matters you need to be aware of (eg
property schemes, insurance claims).
• Check that property schedules are being processed and that quinquennials are
done, as well as annual gas and electrical checks and PAT tests. Make sure they
are returned to the circuit property secretary.
• Check whether there are any potential candidates for ministry. If there are, you
are responsible for arranging (at the candidate’s request) a four-way meeting
with the district Candidates Secretary, a Learning Network officer responsible for
ministry development, and yourself. The purpose of this meeting is to map out
the timetable of their exploration and support. See Steps in Candidating
www.methodist.org.uk/candidatingforms
• Remind staff about the annual reporting of the Statistics for Mission. Some
superintendents find it helpful to give out a proforma for attaching to every
vestry desk. It is your responsibility under SO 358 to ensure (usually by checking
online) that Statistics for Mission information has been input online by your staff
before 31 January each year.
• Remind staff about (and read annually yourself) the duties of a superintendent in
relation to the use of Methodist premises as set out in section 92 of CPD. Remind
them of their need to keep you informed.
• Remind your staff annually of the need to inform you of any cases of ‘sharing’
worship leaders between their local churches.
• Share the meeting dates you have set for the circuit. Remind your colleagues that
their Autumn Church Council meetings should meet after the Circuit Meeting,
and that their Spring Church Council meetings should take place before the
Circuit Meeting (see the pattern in the section titled Circuit Meetings). They will
thank you when they need property approval from the circuit!
• To provide adequate pastoral care across the circuit, make sure you know when
your colleagues are planning holidays during the coming year. Use an early
meeting to decide what out of office auto responses and voicemail messages
colleagues should leave. Given the increase in thefts from manses, beware of
publicising holidays in any way. Out of office and voicemail messages might
38
be better, with a message stating only that you are unavailable and who the
caller should contact for assistance. This will give clear guidance to those in your
pastoral care (and to funeral directors who might be trying to contact staff)
without declaring that the manse is empty.
All ministers stationed in the circuit (including those without appointment) should
be invited to the staff meeting (SO 523(1)).
If you have ministers who are recognised and regarded (SO732), authorised ministers
(AM), authorised to serve (AS) (SO 733) or associate presbyters or deacons (SO733A)
then they should be fully welcomed to your staff meeting, but make sure that they
are not overburdened by it. There should be negotiation with those ministers (who
will also have meetings of their own denomination to attend) to ensure that they
are kept informed by, and are able to inform, the circuit about relevant matters.
There may also be ministers working within your circuit who are stationed in
other appointments – such as chaplains to prisons, hospitals, etc, members of the
Connexional Team or ministers who are working with particular language-based
congregations. Make sure they also are welcomed to the staff meeting, even if their
duties prevent them from attending regularly.
If you have a neighbouring circuit which is a single minister station, check out with
your district chair whether it would be helpful for you to welcome that minister to
the fellowship of your staff meeting.
Staff socials
Some staff like to arrange social gatherings, such as Christmas parties or summer
barbecues. You can hold a party at a restaurant, or ask if someone is willing to host
it at their home. Do remember to invite the additional ministers who are members
of your staff meeting under SO 523(1). And be conscious that for some people this
type of gathering can be uncomfortable.
Lay employees
If any churches (including LEPs) are thinking of employing lay people, then they
should consult the District Chair and the lay employment officer. Before advertising
the job vacancies, they should download the lay employment document pack from
the Methodist Church website, in keeping with SO 438A and Section 57. You can
find the pack at: www.methodist.org.uk/churchemployees
Remember, the Methodist Conference has determined that all Methodist employees
should be paid the National Living Wage, not merely the National Minimum Wage.
Inviting others to the staff
meeting
39
In order to reduce isolation, attend to good normative, formative and restorative
practice whilst being sensitive to risk and safeguarding issues, the Conference has
decided that all ministers in the active work should be in Supervision. For more
details, see: www.methodist.org.uk/supervision
By September 2020, all probationary and ordained ministers in active work will be
expected to be in supervision and attend a meeting of 1.5 hours at least six times
a year, with a supervisor who has been trained and/or authorised to supervise
under the Methodist Church’s Supervision Policy. Together they will reflect on the
supervisee’s vocation and practice. This is already the case for probationers, where
often the superintendent is the trained supervisor.
The model adopted by the Conference is a shared-agenda model where the
probationer/minister brings items to discuss and the supervisor may also
bring some.
See also CPD Book VII Part 14, 4 (Guidelines for Good Practice in Confidentiality and
Pastoral Care: Supervision).
Superintendents under the policy (www.methodist.org.uk/supervisionpolicy) are
not required themselves to supervise, but must ensure that they and their ordained
colleagues receive supervision according to the policy. Those who do supervise must
receive the connexional training and be approved to do so.
The District Chair holds and updates the district supervision implementation plan.
So any local changes to supervision arrangements should be reported to the District
Chair and recorded on that plan. If you have any questions you should approach
your District Chair in the first instance.
As Supervision becomes embedded in the life of the church, we will begin to
consider which lay roles need to be supervised. Guidance will be issued in due
course. For the latest updates, see: www.methodist.org.uk/supervision/FAQ
To help with setting up correct expectations for a supervision session, the
supervisor should complete the Supervision Covenant Form. At the end of each
session, an agreed record is produced and distributed in accordance with the policy.
See: www.methodist.org.uk/supervisionforms
Supervision and oversight
40
While Supervision allows for regular reflection on the normative, formative and
restorative approaches to ministry, MDR is a requirement of the Standing Orders.
Each minister is required to review their work over the past year, and identify new
hopes and goals and potential learning and development needs for the coming year.
To enable this, both ordained and lay contributors share in conversation with the
minister. It is the expectation of the MDR process that the Superintendent acts as the
ordained contributor for each of their colleagues.
Copies of the updated guidelines on MDR can be found at:
www.methodist.org.uk/mdr
Early in the connexional year it is worth having a discussion with staff members who
are leaving the following August, to ascertain when they intend to take holiday and
when their final Sunday in the circuit will be.
Remind them well in advance of the requirements of the charter for incoming
ministers (CPD Book VII Part 1), especially the need to sort files into:
(a) those for handover
(b) those for archiving
(c) those for shredding (Book VII Part 14 (Guidelines for Good Practice in
Confidentiality and Pastoral Care) Section 17, 21).
Plan a farewell service collaboratively with circuit stewards and the staff who are
leaving (don’t just do it yourself!).
When a member of staff is leaving, check with the circuit stewards that they have
arrangements in hand to allow words of thanks (and, in some circuits, a gift) from
the circuit to be given to the departing staff member. Do not allow this to be
left to ‘their own churches’. Ministers are welcomed into the circuit and should
be bid farewell by the circuit. An appropriate moment for this might be at the
refreshments following a circuit service of farewell.
Ministerial development review (MDR)
Saying goodbye to colleagues
41
For details of the particular needs of probationers, see the Handbook for Ministerial
Probation at: www.methodist.org.uk/probationers
Here are some pointers gained from past experience:
• If the practice in your district is for probationers to be welcomed at services in
their own circuit, ensure that arrangements are made for Holy Communion to be
part of that welcome service (SO 723(4)).
• Ideally, probationers should be given the opportunity to regularly attend, but not
lead, worship. Some circuits manage to offer this once a month or once a quarter.
• Set regular meetings for the probationers’ Worship Development Group. This
group needs at least three meetings before February.
• You (or a colleague in Full Connexion) should be present at the Church Councils
of any probationers when they are considering trust business (SO 502(1)(g)(ii)).
Remember (and remind others) that probationer presbyters do not have pastoral
charge (SO 700(8)) but hold pastoral responsibility.
• It is worth noting that MDR does not begin until after a minister has been
received into Full Connexion. However, supervision begins immediately (see
below).
All probationers are required to attend the district probationers’ retreat.
Make sure that probationers take the Sunday after Christmas off (in addition to their
five Sunday entitlement).
Probationers are expected to attend the pre-ordination retreat. They should also
stop work on the Friday before their probationers’ pre-ordination retreat, and so
should not be scheduled to lead worship on the Sunday before the retreat.
Probationers are also strongly encouraged to attend the representative session of
the Conference in the year they are ordained, costs of which are covered by the
Conference Office.
Time off for probationers
Probationers
42
It is your responsibility, where appropriate, to see that probationers have
authorisation to preside at the Lord’s Supper, and to arrange for them to have
wedding authorisation.
Make sure that you are (or, if delegated, that the probationer’s supervisor is)
scheduled to share worship with a presbyteral probationer at least once each
quarter. In the case of a probationer without an authorisation to preside at the
Lord’s Supper, this should be a service of the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper (SO
724(2)).
If your circuit has, or desires to have, a presbyteral or diaconal probationer, then
you (or a colleague to whom supervision is delegated) must have undergone the
required supervision training.
Supervisors should have attended a course in supervision under the interim policy
and be recognised by the Methodist Conference 2017.
Please be aware we have a new standard in supervision under the interim policy,
under which those trained in probationers’ supervision prior to 2018 will need to
retrain. Details of training are available from the Methodist Church website. See:
www.methodist.org.uk/supervision
Probationers must be given the required support and supervision. This is often
weekly to begin with, then possibly less frequently later on. In particular, help them
plan for the first time they do a specific task and in supervision help them reflect on
what they have learned from the experience.
For certain pieces of work, you might need to accompany them through it and
debrief them afterwards.
Authorisation to preside
at Holy Communion
Probationers’ supervision,
induction and support
43
Enabling the people of God to fully realise who they are called to be is the respon-
sibility of every minister. How we speak of calling is vital. Worship materials for
Vocations Sunday(s) are available on the Methodist Church website under Our Faith.
For more information, see: www.methodist.org.uk/vocationssunday
Speak to whoever has responsibility for supporting vocational exploration in your
district/circuit to discover what the arrangements and dates are. This might mean
contacting your Learning Network regional coordinator.
It is useful to find out what grants, if any, are available for lay training from the
district and the circuit.
If you have the great joy of having a candidate for presbyteral or diaconal ministry,
do not underestimate the time it will take to support their candidature.
You should refer to the guidance for superintendents with regard to candidates on
the Methodist Church website: www.methodist.org.uk/candidatingforms
The relevant Standing Orders can be found in Section 71 of CPD. Note especially
your crucial role in ensuring the candidate understands the requirements of SO
710, and that you fulfil all that is required of you in SO 710(3)(a) and (b), and 711.
Consider appointing a portfolio mentor for the candidate.
It is always worth bearing in mind the pastoral implications of support required by
candidates who are not recommended for acceptance.
As superintendent, you have a particular ministry to supernumeraries – which
can bring joy and challenge! It is important that the superintendent recognises
the gifts and graces that a supernumerary might bring to a circuit. It will be your
responsibility to have a conversation about their continuing ministry and practical
issues such as ongoing pastoral care.
Ministry to supernumeraries is a shared responsibility between the superintendent
and the Chair of District. How this manifests itself differs across the Connexion. Be
sure to check this out with your District Chair.
Don’t forget that Standing Order 742b requires that supernumeraries undertaking
formal pastoral work should attend appropriate meetings – including the circuit
staff meeting.
Information pertaining to the life and ministry of supernumeraries and your
relationship to them is at: www.methodist.org.uk/supernumerary-ministers
Vocational exploration and
lay training
Candidating for ministry
Supernumerary ministers
Enabling the ministry of other people
44
The timetable for producing your circuit plan can be tricky. It is best to give one
month’s notice before a preacher is planned to preach. You also need a month to
get the plan drafted and printed (allowing for chasing-up phone calls, etc). If your
plan starts in December, your deadline for plan production and delivery should be
the first Sunday in November, and you ought to ask for dates by 1 October.
Circuits often have a standard form for local preachers to submit. If yours doesn’t,
consider devising one – especially if you don’t want to get postcards or scrappy bits
of paper!
Consider listing worship leaders on the circuit plan. It not only facilitates
collaboration between local preachers and worship leaders, it is also an aide-
memoire to the Local Preachers’ Meeting as to which worship leaders need a
triennial review (SO 683(5)).
If your plan does not show lectionary readings or special Sundays, consider adding
them. If space, you may find it useful to put a special note on the relevant Sundays,
for example: “Clocks go forward/back”.
You might like to consider inviting district officers to preach in your circuit.
Ensure that a copy of the plan is sent to the district chair and any other officers in
your district who have requested it.
Recently, much has been said about General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and
the Data Protection Act 2018. For how this relates to the Church, and local church
activities see www.tmcp.org.uk/about/data-protection
Whatever the policy is for staff preaching around the circuit, as superintendent
you should aim to preach in each church in your circuit at least once a year (See SO
522(1)).
Remember, it is good practice to allow time for ordained colleagues, probationers
who are presbyters and preaching deacons to attend worship on a regular basis. If
this is difficult, why not plan to lead worship with a local preacher, so that they are
not responsible for everything?
Make sure that probationers have the Sunday off after Christmas, and the Sunday
before their probationers’ retreat.
Supervisors must be planned to share worship with presbyteral probationers at least
once in each quarter.
Your preaching commitment
Handy reminders
when making the plan
The circuit plan
45
Local ecumenical partnerships (LEPs)
Be especially aware of issues of authority within LEPs. You only have authority in an
LEP in terms of matters which are specifically Methodist.
Local Advisory Groups should have Methodist representation appointed by the
circuit. Often such people are current or former circuit stewards. If you don’t know
who the current representatives are, then speak to your district ecumenical officer.
It is good to ensure that:
• an appropriate LEP constitution exists, which is in line with the Charity
Commission’s requirements
• you have at least an annual conversation with Methodist members of the local
Advisory Group for each LEP.
If you have LEPs in your circuit which do not have Pastoral Committees, then you
need to appoint a circuit Pastoral Committee (SO 553). Check the provisions and
application of SO 644(11)(iii) in relation to pastoral committees for each LEP.
Extended communion
If you have people authorised to lead services of extended communion (SO 609(2))
make sure that your circuit staff know your policy of instructing those who are
authorised.
46
Methodist schools
The Methodist Church currently has 66 schools in the maintained sector. Almost
all of these are primary schools and several go back to the early 1800s. They are
spread all over the country, but about 50 per cent of them are clustered in the
North West. Historically, some may have been the work of a local church but
now each school is a mission project of the whole circuit and part of the circuit’s
mission strategy. About two-thirds of our schools are shared with the Church of
England (occasionally with other denominations) and represent opportunities for
ecumenical working. Every district has a district schools officer (DSO), who can play
an important role in promoting education locally.
If the circuit has a school that is part of the Methodist Academies and Schools Trust
(MAST), its main responsibilities are laid out in SO500 and SO342. These are formal
requirements, but important opportunities come through everyday loving and
involvement with the school. These may be delivered by key individuals, a particular
congregation, people across the circuit or a combination of all. The circuit does not
have the same formal responsibilities for any Methodist independent schools in the
area, but the invitation to love and work with the school is the same. All of our schools
have a very significant ‘reach’ and families are often heard to say: “For us, this is our
church.” Because of this, it is rewarding to think how to use the link with the school
creatively and intentionally. In addition, many circuits will also promote important
opportunities to support and care for the community schools within their local area.
All Methodist schools in the state sector (maintained schools) are in MAST. Some
schools have converted to academy status and belong to non-Methodist academy
groups – but they are still in MAST. The Methodist academy trust is the Wesley Trust.
Schools in the Wesley Trust still, also, belong to MAST. MAST staff are available to
help with your work with schools, particularly for the key tasks listed below.
The circuit superintendent is an ex-officio governor of a Methodist-maintained
school. This duty is occasionally delegated to another committed Methodist of
good standing, who has the ability to steer the leadership of this important circuit
activity.
The Circuit Meeting needs formally to appoint the foundation governors of the
school. For various reasons, the number of foundation governors for schools vary
but are specified in the school’s Instrument of Government. This works similarly
where the school has become an academy. There are some limits on who can
become a governor – you will find an eligibility form on the Methodist Schools
website.
Circuits working with
Methodist Schools
Governance
47
The circuit is responsible for getting the DBS clearances for its appointees and, if this
is organised by the school, the superintendent should see them. The schools’ visitor
(think ‘deputy DSO’) is a possible candidate.
The circuit has to act in the difficult circumstances where a foundation governor has
to be removed. This may depend on the school’s Instrument of Government.
The Circuit Meeting should regularly receive feedback about the school from its
appointed governors. This could be formal (eg a report) and/or less formal (eg
people from the school do a ‘show and tell’ or lead the meeting’s devotions). The
DSO’s report may link here.
Traditionally, a school has been counted as a church in the allocation of circuit
presbyteral staffing in order to provide chaplaincy for the school family. For
example, it might count as ‘half an appointment’.
It is unwise for the chaplain to be a governor in the school because it sometimes
makes it difficult to fulfil either role.
In stationing, it is very important that the profile talks about the school. There is a
space on the form which makes reference to this.
The circuit safe should contain copies of key legal documents about the school,
particularly the Trust Deed and land agreements.
If the school is voluntary aided, the circuit has some long-standing financial
responsibilities and may need to offer more practical help. The District Advance
Fund may be useful.
Where an area is expecting massive growth through new home building, a school
can be a real opportunity for mission and pioneering. The Department for Education
pays for building a new school, but the circuit would have associated costs in the
development period. This is, again, a place to make common cause with the District.
The superintendent is responsible for the effective advocacy for the school in the
circuit and encouraging the circuit to celebrate the school’s successes.
There is a role, which could be overseen at circuit level, for affirming the ministry of
everyone who works in school, paid or unpaid, as the expression of their Christian
vocation.
For further information you may find the Methodist Schools website helpful at:
www.methodistschools.org.uk
Staffing
Organisation
Celebration
48
During the year before you become superintendent:
• book a place on the superintendents’ induction
• read background documents
• undertake supervision training as appropriate
• check what the Conference has decided and what has changed in CPD this year
• arrange a handover meeting with your predecessor
• get prearranged dates from your predecessor and circuit stewards
• check the September meeting is before 20 September.
On starting your new appointment (during September):
• check the safeguarding files
• book a visit to the homes of significant circuit officers, ideally within the first
quarter
• open the circuit safe (in the company of someone else) and check if there are any
issues which need to be dealt with. Check that the list of contents corresponds
with what is in the safe.
Important information to collect at or by your first staff meeting:
• Covenants of Care: what exists, what needs reviewing
• safeguarding modules – who has undergone what training?
• authorised persons to conduct marriages
• auditors/independent examiners list
• LEP constitutions and delegation of powers
• on which premises is non-Methodist worship taking place? When does it take
place? When is the annual date for renewal of permission?
• book your ‘tour’ of the circuit with each staff member
• consult the diary matters checklist (see Appendix).
The year at a glance: a handy checklist
49
Annual calendar
• Sort out your diary for the year ahead.
• Write letters of authority to those who will deputise for you as chairs of
meetings.
• Write notes for any persons who are ‘on note’, authorising them to accompany a
local preacher this quarter.
• Confirm that someone has sorted out travel to Synod.
• Prepare the Circuit Meeting agenda (hold the first meeting before 20
September).
• At the circuit leadership team meeting, share any Conference decisions affecting
circuits.
• Plan the Local Preachers’ Meeting agenda, including the annual reading of the
duties and rights of the local preacher.
• Visit supernumeraries and widow(er)s with their Minutes of Conference.
• Staff meeting agenda should include:
- a reminder about Statistics for Mission and Property Returns
- reminders to staff entering stationing of the likely dates when they will need
to ensure their manse is available for inspection by a possible successor.
• If the circuit is hoping to appoint a probationer minister in the following
September, provisionally book with the circuit stewards the second (and, less
likely, the third) weekends in January for the probationer’s circuit visit. It is worth
checking also they have the dates for the induction day for circuits receiving
probationers in their diaries. This usually takes place in February.
• Staff meeting agenda should include:
- a request for copies of annual reports from any local churches or other bodies
in the circuit which are registered charities
- a reminder about deadlines for Statistics for Mission (check towards the end of
the month and chase up any outstanding entries).
• Ask circuit property/finance secretary to let you see the annual schedules.
• Sign any property schedules that require your signature.
• Prepare the December Local Preachers’ Meeting agenda.
• Check circuit safe with circuit property/finance secretary or a circuit steward.
September
October
November
50
• Staff meeting agenda should include:
- anything of interest from Statistics for Mission that might inform discussion
at a staff meeting (in particular, note any churches that have gone below the
minimum size; see SO 612)
- post-Christmas pastoral cover
- staff Christmas party
- if you are expecting a probationer next September, remind the member of
staff who is moving that their manse will need to be available for a visit in
January.
• Write notes for any persons who are ‘on note’, authorising them to accompany a
local preacher this quarter (SO564A (4)).
• Write reports for any candidates for the ministry you may have.
• Submit district grant forms for personnel by 31 December.
• Send lay authorisation form to district Policy Committee.
• Ask the district chair for their availability for the September Circuit Meeting if
you might be the subject of a re-invitation.
• Book the district chair for welcome services for new ministers/probationers.
• Prepare the spring Local Preachers’ Meeting agenda.
• If you already have a probationer, seek feedback from appropriate people in
order to write the probationer’s report.
• Prepare and send out the March Circuit Meeting agenda (see Appendix).
• If you have a probationer, write the probationer’s report.
• If you are expecting a probationer, you will be invited to meet them at their
learning institution. It is important that you, and possibly someone else from the
circuit, attend.
• Write notes for any persons who are ‘on note’, authorising them to accompany a
local preacher this quarter.
• Inform the Synod secretary of representatives to Synod elected by the Circuit
Meeting.
• If your circuit is considering changing the number of ministers stationed in it in
18 months’ time, then the district Policy Committee needs to be informed now,
for Synod permission to be given (SO 438).
• Send the remuneration report to the district chair by 31 March.
December
January
February
March–May
March
51
• Arrange Synod travel.
• Remind ministers who are leaving about the requirements of the Charter for
Incoming Ministers.
• Prepare the May/June Local Preachers’ Meeting agenda.
• This is a good time to have a chat with Methodist representatives on LEP Local
Advisory Groups.
• Prepare and send the June Circuit Meeting agenda, if you are having one. Include
a reminder about archives.
• Circuit leadership team agenda should include:
- checking re-invitation procedure, and reminding about the inclusion of
representatives from LEPs
- checking leaving service/presentation arrangements
- arranging welcome services
- ensuring that the manse being vacated is being assessed for an energy
performance certificate, and that all arrangements are in hand for
decorations/alterations
- reminding circuit stewards to make sure that work they have agreed to be
done will be done.
• If you require a probationer in 16 months’ time, have a discussion with the
district chair.
• Write notes for any persons who are ‘on note’, authorising them to accompany a
local preacher this quarter.
• Write collaboratively the annual report for registered charities (Circuit Meeting,
Church Councils).
• Ensure arrangements are in hand for the preparation of an appointment profile
for any staff being sought in next year’s stationing round.
• At the end of the month/early July, you will receive the transitional report for any
probationer who is being stationed in your circuit this September.
• Check with district probationers’ secretary if a mentor has been identified, and
who it is.
• Prepare and send the September Circuit Meeting agenda before you go on
holiday.
April
May
June
July
52
• Visit new members of staff and their families when they move in (telephone
beforehand to check they will be at home!).
• Ensure the Circuit Meeting agenda is sent out to arrive 14 days before the Circuit
Meeting.
• Prepare the September Local Preachers’ Meeting agenda. Include the reading of
the duties and rights of the local preacher.
August
53
Appendices
Agenda reminders
• Present the annual report for the previous year.
• Decide on the number of representatives from each local church.
• Deal with any re-invitations. Report results to district chair/warden of the Diaconal
Order immediately after meeting.
• Return stationing requirements form if you have it at this time of the year.
• Agree appointment profile for any ministerial or probationer appointments being
sought for next year (submit the profile to the chair/warden immediately after the
meeting).
• Delegate authority to an Invitation Committee, should it be needed this autumn.
• Declare if you are considering becoming a Section 58 circuit (ie a circuit with a
modified constitution). Note that three months’ notice is required (SO 581(2)).
• Annually appoint bank mandate signatories.
1. First and foremost talk about the mission of God in the circuit and what is going
well.
2. Other items
• Are there any candidates for ministry?
• Statistics for Mission and procedures for dealing with this.
• Items from Synod.
• Check Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas list and any additions.
• Ask about any property matters that need noting.
• Check whether any charity registration is required.
• Check whether any local church needs to deal with VAT requirements.
• Are ministers aware of insurance certificates for premises users and building
schemes?
• Have annual permissions been renewed for non-Methodist worship on Methodist
premises?
• Have the actions from church and manse quinquennials been completed?
3. Reminders to colleagues (these could be given in written form)
• The requirements for suspension from office due to insolvency or mental
incapacity.
• Lay employment contracts and the Living Wage figure for this year.
September Circuit Meeting agenda should include:
September staff meetings
54
• Copyright and phonographic licences.
• Property schedules should be completed during the light evenings.
• Pastoral referral to the local minister and the hospital chaplain if members go into
hospitals not local to their church.
• The superintendent’s other duties regarding Methodist premises.
• Conference decisions affecting staff work and changes to CPD.
4. Diary checklist
• Decide on dates for your main meetings.
• Set Circuit Meeting dates. If you are in a single minister station, book your chair for
a Circuit Meeting so that you can fix the date before asking the Circuit Meeting to
approve it.
• Set Local Preachers’ Meeting dates.
• Set staff meeting dates.
• Set circuit Leadership Meeting dates.
• Book your MDR with your district chair or their representative.
• Book supervision/ministerial development review time with staff members.
• Book a time to visit staff and their families.
• Check colleagues’ holiday dates, sabbatical dates and pastoral cover.
• Consider any arrangements for the staff Christmas party.
• Make arrangements for the summer (farewell) party.
• Note birthdays of any new staff members and their families (if it is something you
wish to acknowledge).
• Book coffee with ‘extra’ ministers.
• Ensure plan-making deadlines for the year ahead are booked in your diary and
communicated to preachers and local churches.
• In consultation with circuit staff, arrange to preach in each local church at least
once during the year.
• If you have a probationer working alongside you, make sure you book in
supervision. Plan dates for quarterly shared worship.
• Set Worship Development Group dates for probationers.
• Memorials to the Conference, to be sent by 31 March.
• Election of Synod representatives.
• Auditor’s report (if not available last September).
• Appointment of circuit Pastoral Committee (if required).
• Appointment of additional members to Church Councils (if required).
• Review of worship arrangements for former local churches which are now classes of
other local churches.
• Noting appointment of worship leaders to more than one local church.
• Archives (or do this in the June meeting, if you are having one).
March Circuit Meeting agenda should include:
55
First and foremost, Superintendents are presbyters,’ states the 2005 Conference
report What is a Circuit Superintendent?. It follows that Superintendents must
be those who, having been called to presbyteral ministry and having had that
call affirmed by the Church, continue visibly to live out their calling and to be
open about discerning a call to a position of seniority in the Church alongside a
continuing pastoral ministry. Therefore, those identifying presbyters for stationing as
Superintendents look for:
1. Faithfulness in living out a call to presbyteral ministry.
2. An ability to articulate a call to leadership that is founded on a realistic appraisal
of their own gifts, and is identified and supported by others.
3. A willingness to listen to the voice of others in their call to leadership.
4. The ability to witness joyfully to the experience of public representative ministry.
What is a Circuit Superintendent? describes Superintendents as presbyters ‘who
in exercising their ministry undertake particular responsibilities on behalf of the
Conference’. Those called to Superintendency are called to a particular office that
has its place in and affirms the forms of ministry practised in the Methodist Church
in Britain (MCB), and which involves the exercise of oversight over the life of a circuit
and the ministry of colleagues. Therefore, those identifying presbyters for stationing
as Superintendents look for:
1. A recognition of the needs of the church and a willingness to respond
appropriately to them in service.
2. A realistic understanding of the role of a circuit superintendent in the life of the
Methodist Church.
3. An understanding of the nature of oversight as it is exercised and experienced in
the MCB and the capacity to exercise such oversight.
4. An ability to articulate the missional contribution of a circuit.
If Superintendents are first and foremost presbyters, presbyters are first and
foremost people of prayer, who will need a disciplined and robust spirituality to hold
before God that for which the Church has made them responsible and to sustain
them in the exercise of those responsibilities. Therefore, those identifying presbyters
for stationing as Superintendents look for:
1. An openness to the spirit through the means of grace.
2. A well-developed life of prayer that enables the individual to hold responsibility
before God.
3. A devotional life that integrates the practices of prayer with the practices of
ministry.
1. Vocation (call and commitment)
2. Vocation (ministry in the Methodist
Church in Britain)
3. Relationship with God
Criteria and competencies for Superintendents
56
4. A commitment to seek in all things to bring glory to God.
5. A visible commitment to maintaining a life of prayer and to model that for
others.
Those who have been Superintendents know that the words of the Ordinal – ‘this
ministry will make great demands on you and those close to you’ – acquire greater
meaning. The MCB asks its Superintendents to bear significant responsibility for the
life of several worshipping communities and for the MCB’s witness in a given area.
Superintendents need to be able to deal with stressful situations, to work long hours
sometimes, to be public representatives of the circuit, to address complex issues of
discipline, to manage conflict, and to continue to exercise the role of a presbyter,
in most cases continuing to hold pastoral responsibility for a church or churches.
Therefore, those identifying presbyters for stationing as Superintendents look for:
1. A realistic understanding of their own strengths and weaknesses.
2. A willingness to seek help in times of need.
3. Appropriate patterns of self-care that model good practice for others.
4. A desire to improve their practice and discipleship.
5. Appropriate self-reliance and self-motivation, and the ability to effectively draw
on resources from others and from the Church.
6. The ability to inspire the trust and confidence of others.
The ability to work with others is central to Superintendency. Superintendents need
to enjoy good relationships with their ordained colleagues, the circuit stewards and
other lay leaders in the circuit, the members of their churches, and their peers in the
district, among others. Stories of the mission of a circuit being hampered or even
disabled by inappropriate interpersonal dynamics have been frighteningly common
in the MCB, but productive relationships can no more be expected to develop
automatically in the Church than in other human communities, as the evidence of
the Pauline letters attests. While Superintendents cannot bear all the responsibility
for forming and maintaining productive relationships in the Church, they play a
leading role in enabling colleagues and others to work together and in ensuring
that the circuit models estimable Christian fellowship. Therefore, those identifying
presbyters for stationing as Superintendents look for:
1. Highly developed self-awareness and the ability to be aware of one’s impact on
others.
2. A good understanding of differences and the ability to build inclusive
communities.
3. The ability to work with conflict to enable transformation and, ideally,
reconciliation.
4. Highly developed pastoral skills.
5. The ability to deploy a range of strategies in difficult interpersonal relationships
6. Proven ability to receive and the potential to offer effective supervision.
4. Personality and character
5. Being in relationship with
others
57
7. An informed awareness of their own power and vulnerabilities.
8. The ability to use authority appropriately.
9. The ability to demonstrate and counsel others on the appropriate use of
boundaries.
‘The Circuit is the primary unit in which Local Churches express and experience
their interconnexion in the Body of Christ, for the purposes of mission, mutual
encouragement and help’ (SO 500). Beyond the call to engage in mission, which
is for all Christians, the particular vocation of a Superintendent is to enable the
effective participation of a Methodist circuit in the mission Dei. Therefore, those
identifying presbyters for stationing as Superintendents look for:
1. The capacity to offer prophetic leadership in mission.
2. The ability to hear and to articulate the call of God to mission.
3. An ability to interpret the culture of their locality and to identify the
requirements of the work of God in response.
4. The ability to see how the Church’s personnel and resources in an area might be
effectively deployed.
5. A secure Methodist identity and the ability to inspire others in that.
6. A well-developed knowledge and understanding of the governance structures of
the local Methodist circuit.
7. Clear understanding of Methodist policy and how it is effectively administered.
8. The awareness of the role as a representative leader in Methodism and in an
ecumenical context.
9. Clear understanding of the duties of Methodist Trustees.
10. The ability to advocate safeguarding procedures.
Superintendency is a leadership role in the life of the Church. Just as all oversight in
the MCB has a shared nature, however much it seems to be invested in an individual,
leadership in the MCB always involves ways of working collaboratively and
collegially. Therefore, those identifying presbyters for stationing as Superintendents
look for:
1. The understanding of the circuit as a unit for mission and the ability to make that
effective.
2. Developed administrative skills.
3. Developed skill in chairing public meetings.
4. Clear understanding of the power inherent in Superintendency in a circuit.
5. Developed skills of change management.
6. An understanding of a range of leadership styles and the ability to deploy them.
7. The ability to stimulate theological reflection.
8. The ability to recognise and encourage the gifts in others and to learn from their
failures and successes.
9. A capacity for visionary leadership.
6. The Church’s ministry in God’s
world
7. Leadership and collaboration
58
10. A developed understanding of risk and the ability to act independently and take
responsibility for own actions.
11. The ability to encourage the voices of all involved in the life of the circuit.
12. The ability and willingness to challenge inappropriate behaviour.
13. The ability to use supervision effectively as a tool for oversight.
14. The ability to manage employees, where necessary.
15. The ability to delegate and to trust in the competence of others.
16. The ability to build, lead and work with teams.
17. The ability to delegate appropriately.
All presbyters continue to be students of theology throughout their ministry. The
role of the Superintendent in modelling this aspect of ministry and in fostering
learning communities within the life of a circuit is crucial in enabling theologically
informed worship, fellowship and mission. Therefore, those identifying presbyters
for stationing as Superintendents look for:
1. Demonstrable skills of and the ability to lead others in theological reflection.
2. The ability to model and encourage practices of study.
3. The ability to recognise the learning needs of a community of Christians and to
draw effectively on the resources of the church and wider community.
4. The proven capacity to address her/his own learning needs by, for example,
attending appropriate conferences and training.
5. The ability and willingness to create space for learning and theological reflection.
The communication of the Good News of Christ is central to the ministry of all
presbyters and circuits. Superintendents will find themselves exercising this ministry
as spokespeople for a circuit. They have the responsibility of ensuring that good
communication systems are in place to enable the taking forward of God’s mission
within and on behalf of the circuit. Therefore, those identifying presbyters for
stationing as Superintendents look for:
1. Advanced communication skills, including the ability to deal with broadcast
media.
2. The ability to speak with informed authority on behalf of a circuit.
3. The ability to exercise effective oversight over a circuit’s communications systems
and publications.
4. The ability to enable good communication within a circuit and between its
various bodies.
5. The ability to enable good communication on behalf of a circuit.
6. The ability to clearly articulate theological truths and the priorities of the church.
7. The capacity to communicate effectively with and to enable effective
communication between different offices and officers in the Church.
8. Learning and understanding
9. Communication
59
1. Opening Devotions
2. Membership of meeting and apologies for
absence
3. Minutes of last Church Council (distributed)
4. Matters arising not covered by agenda
5. Declaration of AOB for end of meeting
6. Correspondence
Our calling to EVANGELISM: The Church exists
to make more followers of Jesus Christ
7. Circuit vision strategy document
8. Our mission statement
9. Junior Church report
10. Our new coffee shop
11. Update to website
Our Calling to SERVICE: The Church exists to
be a good neighbour to people in need and to
challenge injustice
12. Finance – including our giving to charities
(policy)
13. Outside users
14. Property and resources group
15. Safeguarding: acceptance of policy and module A
16. Newsletter
17. Pastoral list
Our Calling to WORSHIP: The Church exists to
increase awareness of God’s presence and to
celebrate God’s love
18. Review of worship, including:
Christmas and Boxing Day
Covenant service
Future special services
Appointing worship leaders
The new hymn book proposal
The organ
Our Calling to LEARNING AND CARING: The
Church exists to help people to grow and learn
as Christians, through mutual support and care
19. Engaging in growth: the way forward: social
events, Bible study?
20. Vocations Day
21. Fundraising
22. Christmas meal for the homeless
23. Visioning day – set date
24. Any other business
25. Data protection and confidentiality
26. Date of the Church Council
27. Devotions to be led by…
28. Closing prayers.
Example of a Church Council Agenda shaped around Our Calling
Here is an example of an agenda based on Responding to the Gospel of God’s love in Christ. The church this
was drawn up for is made up of 100 regular worshippers.
The individual items can be changed and reordered. Move items regularly to fit under the four headings this
will enable the meeting to view and deal with through the business through the lens of worship, evangelism,
service and learning and caring.
Like all agendas be aware of timing. Although this agenda looks full – it gives a guide to the council how much
is needs to be covered in the time we have. Some things will be for discussion and other things for information.
This meeting lasted two hours.
Of course, it is possible to do a similar thing for Circuit meetings.
We will pray daily
We worship with others regularly.
We will look and listen for God in Scripture and the world.
Worship
Learning and caring We will care for ourselves and those around us.
We will practise hospitality and generosity.
We will learn more about our faith.
Service We will help and serve people in our communities
and beyond.
We will honour creation and tend the environment.
We will challenge injustice.
Evangelism We will speak of the love of God in Jesus.
We will live in such a way that others might be drawn to Jesus.
We will share our faith with others, sensitively.
A Methodist Way of Life
The calling of the Methodist Church is to respond to the gospel of God’s love in Christ.
As far as we are able, we commit to this way of life:
May each life be a blessing within and beyond God’s Church, for the transformation of the world.
DRAFT
Febru
ary 2020
A Methodist Way of Life Accountability questions
A Methodist Way of Life requires us to be disciples together, encouraging and being accountable to each other. Regularly discussing these questions will help.
Worship What is the pattern of your prayer life?
How easy or hard do you find it?
What has recently spoken to you in worship or in the Bible?
When, recently, have you felt close to God or distant from God?
Learning and caring How have you practised generosity and hospitality since we last met?
How are you caring for yourself?
How and what are you being helped to learn at the moment?
What support have you received from and given to others in living out your shared faith?
Service How are you seeking to serve others in your communities and beyond at the moment?
What, recently, has helped or hindered you in your service of others?
What issues of injustice are you currently concerned about?
What are you doing in response?
How can we support each other in these commitments?
Evangelism What opportunities to share your faith have there been since we last met?
How have you responded to those opportunities to share your faith?
Are there any particular people you should pray for or invite to consider Christian faith?
In all these things: how can we support each other in our commitments?
DRAFTFebruary 2020
62
Contacting the Connexional Team
A full list of contacts can be found at:
www.methodist.org.uk/connexionalteam
Methodist Church House
25 Marylebone Road, London NW1 5JR
Tel: 020 7486 5502
Email: [email protected]
TMCP
Central Buildings, Oldham Street, Manchester M1 1JQ
Tel: 0161 235 6770
Email: [email protected]
www.tmcp.org.uk
The Secretary of the Conference: the Revd Dr Jonathan Hustler
Tel: 020 7467 5140
Connexional Secretary: Doug Swanney
Tel: 020 7467 5185
Assistant Secretary of the Conference: the Revd Ruth Gee
Tel: 020 7467 3520
Director of Evangelism: Trey Hall
Tel: 020 7467 3776
Ministry Development Coordinator: the Revd Paul Wood
Tel: 020 7467 5276
Employment: Human Resources and Development Manager: Sushila Jetha
Tel: 020 7467 5198
Grants Team Leader: Julian Bond
Tel: 020 7467 5178
Remember, the Connexional Team
is available to help you.
Some individuals you may need to
contact
63
Conference Officer for Legal and Constitutional Practice
Tel: 020 7467 5278
Safeguardng Adviser: Tim Carter
Tel: 07969 087868
Officer for Worship and Local Preachers: Bob Bartindale
Tel: 07896 330244
Local Preachers and Worship Leaders
Administrative Matters
Tel: 020 7467 3774
Media Office, Director of Communications: Jillian Moody
Tel: 020 7467 5112
Property Support Officer: Leslie Matthews
Tel: 020 7467 5271
Conservation Officer: Joanne Balmforth
Tel: 0161 235 6739
Web Support Officer: Verena Thim
(Statistics for Mission, Annual returns, Consents, Ministers’ Personnel File)
Tel: 020 7467 5199
Some individuals you may need to
contact
Feedback, corrections, amendments or suggestions for this guide are welcome to
the Revd Paul Wood, Ministry Development Coordinator
64
Things I wish someone had told me
The Supers’ Conference is a
must-go-to
Eat with your team, pray with
your team
Don’t forget to celebrate the call to
superintendency
You will feel guilty that you
can’t do everything
– don’t!
It’s good to be the Super!
Discover the freedoms
you have
65
We asked a group of ministers who had recently become superintendents to share their top tips for resilience.
Here are their suggestions.
Top tips for resilience
• Make time for the things that feed or
energise you as a minister.
• Programme in your holidays at the start
of the year (or earlier), before your diary
becomes filled.
• Know you are where God called you to be.
• Hold regular staff meetings (in nice
cafés?).
• Laugh with family and friends.
• Spend more time in prayer.
• Lead by example.
• Factor in recovery time in your diary.
• Once every month, do something
spontaneous and unplanned. Don’t feel
guilty!
• Remember to keep praying.
• Engage in an activity that is not church-or
circuit-oriented (eg singing, or playing a
sport).
• Be self-aware, and recognise when it is
time to stop.
• Take regular, pre-planned holidays.
• Have a creative hobby.
• Take your dogs for a walk.
• Eat and drink with friends and family –
and have a lie-in afterwards!
• Be able to say “no” and mean it!
• Stay in touch:
build relationships
show interest
support in difficulties
celebrate.
• Work out who you can trust – then trust
yourself to trust them wisely.
• Stick a note on the office whiteboard
saying what you are going to do on your
next day off.
• Have regular ‘catch-up’ days with no
meetings scheduled.
• ‘Breathe’ between one task and the next.
For other ideas see the Wheel of Well-being
website at: www.wheelofwellbeing.org
For sharing ideas and hearing how others are
in ministry, see: www.sheldonhub.org
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To download your own copies of the Our Calling poster from the Methodist Church website go to www.methodist.org.uk/ourcalling
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We are the Methodist Church,
our calling is to respond to
the gospel of God’s love in Christ and to live out
its discipleship in worship
and mission
ServiceWorship EvangelismLearning and Caring
68
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of Ministries: Vocations & Worship
Methodist Church in Britain
Methodist Church House
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London NW1 5JR
www.methodist.org.uk
Registered charity no. 1132208© Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes Revised and updated 2020
A guide for superintendent ministers